Zusammenfassung der Ressource
SACRED ARHITECTURE
GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE
- INTRO
- church combines elements: structure,
contents, cultural meanings
- Christian understanding of
world shaped/represented
by visual and material
surroundings
- medieval church = combo
between visual arts and
devotional performance
- 1 EARLY GOTHIC AT
ST DENIS
- pointed arches - taller-
Gothic (from German)
- royal burials - coronation regalia -
relics of Saint Denis
- SUGER - wanted light + furnishings - best
materials- effects rather than building itself
- enhance worldy and spiritual power - route to divine - use of
building = metaphor (St Paul) - apostles and prophets =
foundations, JC = cornerstone
- earthly world to spiritual world - enlightnement
- gold, semi precious
stones/gems - stained glass
- rebuilt
from 1130s
- 2 METHODS AND THEORIES FOR
UNDERSTANDING MEDIEVAL GREAT
CHURCH ARCHITECTURE
- group 'great' churches of
similar style - share
architectural forms - 'formal
analysis' - enable
comparisons between
buildings
- widen context for evidence
on decision making during
building - cult of a saint to
support Kingship of
England
- evidence doesn't focus on uses, forms and
especially meanings of a building
- holistic approach - how building made to work for
communities (religious and secular) they served - political,
secular needs and interests of patrons and communities
- Historian Lindsay Jones - 3 uses of sacred architecture:
ORIENTATION - helps with understanding rel of universe
and earth COMMEMORATION - memorial or home of
relics/homage to saint (miracles) RITUAL CONTEXT -
performance, contemplation, propitiation (pleasing the
saints/god/jesus by offerings/confession), sanctuary
- Secular elements: heraldry
- carved into stone -
presence of donor families
or civic involvement:
political hierarchy and
authority
- SUGERS COMMISSION - NEW END OF SAINT DENIS
- chevet -
- semi-circle behind altar - ambulatory - chapels - made
wider in rebuild due to previous overcrowding
- exterior shows flow of chapels - Suger may have told builders
what building should DO rather than what it should LOOK LIKE
- names of builders
not recorded
- Suger did not record evolution of building
- amalgamation of different masons,
master carvers ideas and opinions
rather than 1 single concept
- east end spiritually powerful - high altar -
JC due to return from the east
- OTHER EXAMPLES
- AUXERRE- rebuilt from 1215 - compete with
others around - accommodate growing
congregations - prestige for bishop/patrons -
building not sacred but acquired sacred purpose
- REIMS - similar details to Westminster
Abbey - important for master builders -
Henry de Reynes had worked on it - rebuilt
1211 - 1250s
- 3 THE GREAT GOTHIC CHURCH:
FORMAL CHARACTERISTICS
- chapels (chevet), altar,
crossing, transepts, nave, choir,
screen, aisle, arcade,
ambulatory
- based on latin cross - some predictable
relationships eg nave = 2x width of aisles - altar
faces east - main door west - variations =
crossing may have tower above- choir in
non-monastic churches - screen separates
clergy from laity
- clerestory,
triforium,
main arcade,
springing,
shaft
- extra windows and height =
more light - higher ceilings
(roman churches darker, lower)
- areas separated by pillars - vaulted ceilings with
ribs - decorated west exterior -
- Furnishings
- fixtures or fittings - screens to subdivide areas (sep. clergy from
laity) - laity not able to go further than nave - lots of altars for
different saints - endowed by individuals or guilds or institutions -
donors buying speedy route to heaven - each altar had art - stained
glass, altar retable, frontal, textiles, metalwork, vessels
- 4 WESTMINSTER ABBEY
- Saint Ed the C;s shrine
behind altar - royal
tombs - ambulatory -
monastic buildings and
cloisters to south -
- rebuilding 1246
- St Peters - consecrated 1065 -
Edward the Confessor - Harold II -
William the Conq 1066 - Henry III
(1216 - 72)
- Henry III rebuilding begun 1246 with
Henry de Reynes
- SIGNIFICANCE OF
ROYAL PATRONAGE
- paid for by Henry III -
most "lavishly finished
church of 13th C -
coronations - shrine to
Saint Edward (ex king) -
repository for royal
regalia - royal burial
place
- although monastic, most important
uses = secular main uses
- FRENCH AND
ENGLISH
GOTHIC AT
WESTMINSTER
ABBEY
- Gothic dominant 1100 - 1500 - DECORATED GOTHIC= 13th C
England = window tracery - effects of light - apparent lack of load
bearing walls - definiing G characteristics
- 'rayonnant' = radiating - re complex tracery of rose/round
windows from 1230 plus arched windows
- design resulting from masons travelling in Europe and
sharing/experimenting for different patrons
- AESTHETIC
PROPERTIES OF
WESTMINSTER
ABBEY
- high nave - chevet - rose window - height ratio of
arcade:triforium;clerestory same as at Amiens
- tracery in gallery like Sainte-Chapelle Paris
- relics of Christ - crown of thorns
- MULTIPLE
MEANINGS AT
WESTMINSTER
ABBEY
- Henry III au fait with French
court culture (M Eleanor of
Provence) - poss wanted to
emulate Fr. cathedrals - set on
total effect rather than particular
style distinctions - aware of Louis
IX's influence in Paris
- material and spiritual seem to be
considered of equal importance
- ROYAL POWER AND
WESTMINSTER
ABBEY